Oscar Scott, his wife, and their five young children were returning home to Virginia after a day at Bays Mountain Park this past Sunday, when they decided to take the "scenic route" back through Hawkins County.

But after getting lost down an extremely narrow old road, Scott determined that the best recourse would be to turn around and go back.

He had just put his 1999 Chevy Tahoe in reverse when he heard a woman "hollering" from a porch about 150 feet away.

Before Scott could realize what was happening, a bullet had struck the passenger side of the vehicle.

"She fired one shot and my wife hollered and told her we’re just turning around, and then she shot again," Scott told the Kingsport Times-News. "We got out of there pretty well as fast as we could. I still don’t really know what her problem was."

Thankfully, no one was injured.

Scott phoned the local Sheriff’s Office to report the incident, and Sgt. Michael Allen was dispatched to the scene.

According to his report, the woman, identified as Margie Rhea Ramey, confessed to firing her .22 caliber rifle at the car, claiming "she has had a continuous problem with people tearing up her driveway."

She was subsequently booked into Hawkins County Jail on seven counts of felony reckless endangerment, but bonded out later that night.

Her preliminary hearing has been set for September 23rd.

"At the end of her drive going up to her house she did have a no trespassing sign," Scott acknowledged, but said the narrow road left him no choice but to back up into her driveway. "The road isn’t even wide enough for two vehicles, and at the end there it’s barely wide enough for one."

"I don’t know what’s happened to her in the past, but me, my wife and five kids weren’t doing anything wrong," he said. "I know you can’t shoot at somebody for turning around in your driveway."